What does fully understanding maths consist of? Knowing the axioms, the rules of inference, and then being able to apply the latter to the former? So I'm provided with some input sentences, told what to do with them, and then output the result. — Michael
Then as I keep asking, what evidence shows that humans can genuinely feel emotions but that computers/robots can't? Clearly it can't be empirical evidence because you're saying that outward behaviour can be "fake". So you have non-empirical evidence? — Michael
Something about machines not being animals, probably. — Marchesky
And computers form a linguistic community?
It seems clear to me that you don't have any evidence that humans can feel but that computers can't. It seems clear to me that this is just a dogmatic assertions. I'm not sure why you're so unwilling to admit this. — Michael
Marchesk, stop avoiding. You said that your claim that humans can understand but that computers can't isn't dogma. You said that you have evidence. Tell me what that evidence is. — Michael
Do computers do something more than produce the symbols we program them to produce in the proper situations? — Marchesk
So I'm still waiting for the evidence that shows that people are doing more than manipulating symbols and that computers aren't. — Michael
This cuts both ways though, do humans/animals do something more than produce a programmed/hard-wired output in the proper situations? — Soylent
Computers and robots have shown creativity and novelty within a specific domain. — Soylent
So I'm still waiting for the evidence that shows that people are doing more than manipulating symbols and that computers aren't. — Michael
Before language, there were animals who experienced and felt. That's what's fundamental. Language is late in the game. Symbols are parasitic. — Marchesk
Eventually you're going to have to concede that we use the word "horse" to talk about this type of animal rather than another, and so that's why this type of animal is a horse rather than something else.
Again, no, horses aren't horses because we call them 'horses.' That's dumb, because they would go on being horses even if we called them something else. In fact, most people in history have called them something totally different, yet they were still horses for all that. — TheGreatWhatever
You confuse "to be a horse is to have qualities A, B, and C because we use the word "horse" to name those things which have qualities A, B, and C" with "X has qualities X, Y, and Z iff we use the word 'horse' to name it" (as if calling a thing by that name gives it those properties and not calling a thing by that name removes those properties from it). I'm saying the former, not the latter. Nobody says the latter. — Michael
"To be a horse is to have qualities A, B and C because we use the word 'horse' to name things which have qualities A, B, and C:" it follows from this that if we use the word 'horse' instead to name things that have the qualities of rabbits, then rabbits would be horses. And since they were not horses before, surely even you will admit, you are committed to saying we can turn rabbits into horses by calling them 'horse.' But since we can't, your position is wrong. — TheGreatWhatever
Yes, since they don't always produce the same output. Animals, and particularly humans, display a great deal of flexibility and variability There is also a question of what determines the proper situation. What is proper in a given situation? Often, human culture defines that.
An example for the wild is an offspring nest where a video camera was setup and streamed online. The mother, for unknown reasons, started attacking the offspring chicks, and failed to feed them properly. That doesn't make much sense from an evolutionary point of view, but life is messy. — Marchesk
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